October 6th “Walk In for the Schools Our Students Deserve” Round Up

An educator at Wedgewood International School in Milwaukee during the October 6th day of action.

On October 6th, public education supporters organized one of the largest coordinated public education actions ever, a series of local school “walk-ins”. The walk-ins demonstrated support for the schools, “all our students deserve,” and lifted up specific local issues of equity and opportunity.

Over 2,000 schools with over 100,000 people were engaged. Many walk-ins included district administrators, local elected officials, civil rights leaders, clergy and of course parents and grandparents.

The campaign for the schools, “all students deserve,” is coordinated through the Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools. See AROS principles here.

AROS held its first coordinated walk-in on February 17th of this last year with over 40 cities participating. It then held a second set of walk-ins on May 4th, with over 70 cities participating. With 234 cities participating on October 6th it has become clear that the movement to defend our public schools is rising. Example walk-in Video: Minneapolis.

Key Stats:

The National Education Association (NEA) had 98 cities registered for the event and over 1,000 NEA represented schools participated in the walk-ins. 73% of NEA locals participating in the walk-ins were doing so for the first time. Locals chose one or more local issues to lift up on the day of the walk-in. Below is a breakdown of the issues identified and percentage of locals that choose them:

This NEA Story Captures the breadth of national attention and press coverage received for this event. It also captures social media, pictures and video. Please click on link below to see the scope of the coverage and social media attention the walk-ins garnered:

The #4 Trending Topic on Twitter on the Morning of October 6th was #ReclaimOurSchools.

Just in Radio and T.V. interviews alone, we had a verified impression reach of over 3.6 million people. See complete additional clips after the list of participating cities.

In Chicago, the walk-ins served not only as a way to call for more funding but also as a way to rally support for teachers, who plan to strike next week if their union does not reach a contract deal with the school system.

The Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools is mobilizing thousands of parents, students and educators at 238 schools across the country today to protest inadequate funding of public education, diversion of public dollars to charter schools, and funding inequities in black and brown communities. Participants will gather outside public schools before the start of the school day and “walking in” en masse. AROS expects roughly 100,000 people to participate — “probably more,” a spokesman told Morning Education. In Massachusetts, walk-ins will campaign against Question 2, a ballot measure that would allow for the expansion of charter schools in the state. Many of the demonstrations will be led by teachers’ unions — NEA President Lily Eskelsen García will attend a walk-in in Wake County, N.C., for instance — while others are being coordinated by parent groups, such as in Prince George’s County, Md.

Ferguson was upbeat and enthusiastic despite the limited turnout, saying she wasn’t disappointed. “Absolutely not,” Ferguson said. “This is the first event of its kind in Kenosha, and this is the first school. It’s being done at many schools in Milwaukee. It’s being done statewide for public education. This is to raise awareness about how important it is to fund public education. The state needs to fund us.”

“We want the next president to close the Wall St. billionaire tax loopholes that rob our public schools of the money they need to provide our children with the education they deserve. Many schools in Black and Brown communities across the country are called failing. But it is the students, parents and educators that have been failed.”

“In a moment when a couple dozen investment bankers in the U.S. together make more than every kindergarten teacher in the country combined, we know something is very wrong,” said Blair. “Many schools in Black and Brown communities across the country are called failing. But it is the students, parents and educators that have been failed.”

In a visit to Spring Garden Elementary School, Tim Kaine said he didn’t think Donald Trump was a good role model for children, and he saw distress in the Republican camp.

“I think there’s a level of desperation in the Trump campaign right now. Donald clearly did a very very poor job at the debate — at his first debate. And then two nights ago, his running mate basically threw him under the bus.”

“We know what can happen when students have the opportunity to learn in environments that are safe, adequately funded, inspiring, and positioned to help them reach their full potential,” Eskelsen García said. “Across the country today, people who believe in the power of public education are proclaiming that we will not apologize for standing up for the needs of our students, our educators, communities, and public schools. All of us—students, educators, parents and the entire community are all in for public education.”

The Walk-In for Public Education is organized by the local Educators Association, and on a larger scale by the National Education Association. More than 200 communities from coast to coast were expected to participate in their own events.

The goal is to bring awareness to financial cuts to public school funding while also bringing positive support to the district and its educators.

“Will we prepare our students and our communities to thrive not just today but tomorrow? And together 900 schools across the country, thousands of parents we demand it and we will not stop until we get it,” said AROS National Director Keron Blair.

Parents, teachers and students who are concerned about how public schools are funded are holding walk-ins at schools in Connecticut today, as well as across the nation, in protest and to call on leaders to better fund the schools.

Nine Meriden schools are taking part in this event, as well as several other school districts across the state. The goal behind these walk-ins is to “reclaim the schools” and shine a spotlight on all the good that teachers do and the success of their students. The event also is used to send a powerful message.

“To have a free public education available to them with teachers who are invested in their success and you can see them as a whole person, not just a test score, I think that’s important for success,” Peters said.

The ‘walk-ins’ are actually mini rallies that start 15 minutes prior to the school day. After the rallies, the school day will begin on-schedule. The event is behind held in conjunction with The Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools (AROS), an organization that works on behalf of “educational justice and equity in access to school resources and opportunities.”

“Our teachers want less testing. Parents want less testing. Our teachers want authentic assessment and a realistic view of how their child is doing. Our communities want that,” he said. “Our parents don’t believe their students are doing F work, and our teachers know they’re not. And they want a reflective tool. They want something that reflects the hard work that the kids are doing.”

As for the walk-in event itself, Emporia High School students and faculty showed pride in their school by creating different posters about why education funding is so important for the welfare of Kansas residents.

“I was in high school when the desegregation order was signed in 1971,” Bellovich said. “White people left in droves,” which he said challenged the viability of the neighborhood school model in Detroit.

“When I was a student, we were held up as a national model for great schools,” Bellovich said.

That’s not the case anymore, said Shawn Kendrick, a Detroit schools parent who worried that Detroit students not only were behind their suburban counterparts, but students globally.

“It is the promise to boys and girls all over our nation, the opportunity to have a bus pick you up every day and transport you safely to school, to have a teacher waiting for you behind closed doors, and to have a nutritional lunch, and to transport you back home safely every day,” Lansdale said. “That’s called the promise of public education.”

Both Grime and Adkins said the walk-in is not directly related to the recent controversial state report cards on school districts. The Port Clinton City School District received an “A” on graduation rate and a “B” on progress, but a “D” on achievement and an “F” in “gap closing,” which tracks “how well schools are meeting the performance expectations for our most vulnerable populations of students in English language arts, math and graduation.”

“Instead of a walk-out, it’s a walk-in because we wanted to show we are in support of our parents and students,” said Mo Kashmiri, associate executive director of FTA. “We don’t want to go back to the days of layoffs and cutbacks. We’re going to fight for our students and our profession. We’re sick of not being No. 1.”

“Anchorage students deserve the best possible education we can provide”, said Brinna Wojtalewicz, Anchorage Education Association President in a press release. “By encouraging students, parents, and educators to work together we can make Anchorage schools and community stronger.”

Ipsita Lizardi, a parent of 11 and 12 year old’s, is passionate about high quality public education. “I was educated around the world and I chose public schools in Springfield because I met the teachers and they are incredibly dedicated, and if there’s going to be any expansion of funding for education, it should be for the teachers.”

“I am a property owner with lots of acres, and it greatly affects me. But as a community member who pays a great deal of property tax and an employee of the district, I fully support N and O,” Blount said as she waved a sign at passing cars on Geer Road. Beside her, sixth-grade teacher April Welch said passing Proposition 55 was essential for low-income schools, including Crowell. “We want to give them the best we can here to raise them up and give them the best chance at college,” Welch said.

“We will never walk out on public education,” Cohen said. “We will never walk out on our students. Today, in a sign and a show of solidarity, we are walking in to guarantee a great public school for each and every student.”

AROS says 1,000 schools in 200 cities participated in the event. While signs were given to students to write whatever they wanted, the students did not go negative. Some used the Alliance’s “We Demand the Schools All Our Children Deserve.” Others hand-wrote “All Our Children Deserve… A Voice, A Safe Environment, or Better Recreation.”

“We want the next president to close the Wall St. billionaire tax loopholes that rob our public schools of the money they need to provide our children with the education they deserve. Many schools in Black and Brown communities across the country are called failing. But it is the students, parents and educators that have been failed.”

“We absolutely cut more than a million dollars from our budget during this block grant period of time. And we had to let go of over 70 full time employees, 12 of those were teachers,” said Aaron Estabrook, Manhattan-Ogden USD 383 board member.

The morning culminated with a walk-in at each school site. The local Trenton AROS (Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools) coalition was one of 200 districts across the country advocating for schools that our students deserve. As students and staff entered the building you could hear the chants of “Whose schools? Our schools; Whose kids? Our kids.”